Collection 

Self-Driving Laboratories for Chemistry and Materials Science

Submission status
Closed
Submission deadline

The integration of self-driving laboratories and advanced automation software is revolutionising the fields of chemistry and materials science. By harnessing the power of robotics, artificial intelligence (AI), and modern data analytics, these autonomous systems enhance research efficiency, reproducibility, and accelerate the pace of discovery. Self-driving labs are capable of autonomously designing, executing, and analysing experiments, enabling rapid synthesis and characterization of new compounds and materials. For example, automated platforms can iteratively optimise reaction conditions and explore vast chemical spaces more effectively than traditional manual methods.

Automation facilitates the systematic investigation of chemistry or material space, allowing researchers to conduct a higher number of experiments in a reproducible and efficient manner. When combined with AI-driven data analysis, these automated systems not only increase experimental throughput but also enhance the success rate of each experiment through intelligent decision-making and adaptive experimentation. This synergy empowers researchers to tackle complex scientific challenges more effectively and accelerates the discovery of novel materials with applications in electronics, energy storage, catalysis, and sustainable technologies.

This special Collection aims to showcase the latest advancements, methodologies, and applications of self-driving laboratories and automation software in chemistry and materials science. We invite original research articles and perspectives that contribute to this rapidly evolving field, including insightful case studies of operational self-driving labs.

This Collection welcomes the following subtopic, including but not limited to:

  1. Case studies of self-driving labs in academic and industrial settings
  2. Development of autonomous experimental platforms in chemistry and materials science
  3. Machine learning algorithms for experimental design and optimisation
  4. Integration of robotics and AI in laboratory automation
  5. Autonomous synthesis and characterisation techniques
  6. Computational methods guiding experiments in self-driving labs
  7. Human-machine collaboration in automated research environments
  8. Ethical considerations and best practices in laboratory automation
machine learning automation

Editors

The Collection will publish original research papers, and articles in various formats (full details on content types can be found here). Papers will be published in npj Computational Materials as soon as they are accepted and then collected together and promoted on the Collection homepage. All Collections are associated with a call for papers and are managed by one or more journal editors and/or Guest Editors.

This Collection welcomes submissions from all authors – and not by invitation only – on the condition that the manuscripts fall within the scope of the Collection and of npj Computational Materials more generally. All submissions are subject to the same peer review process and editorial standards as regular npj Computational Materials articles, including the journal’s policy on competing interests. The Editors declare no competing interests with the submissions which they have handled through the peer review process. The peer review of any submissions for which the Editors have competing interests is handled by another Editor who has no competing interests. For more information, refer to our Collections guidelines.

This Collection is not supported by sponsorship.